Friday, May 15, 2026--San Antonio
White River Crossing by Ian McGuire is historical fiction set in far north central Canada in the late 1700s. The Hudson Bay Company has an outpost there for trading for pelts brought in by European and Native American hunters. The story revolves around multiple people--the manager of the company's outpost, his second in command, the manager's young nephew, the post's doctor, a former sailor who came to work for the company after the death of his only friend, and one of chiefs of a trusted nearby native tribe along with his wife, son, and son's wife. A block of quartz with two veins of pure gold have been brought to the manager of the post who decides that he can trust the person bringing it is telling the truth about where he says it is from and how much is there. The area is much further north in the Barrens where the Eskimos (considered to be a dangerous group) live. Realizing the value of the find if there is gold there and what it could mean to him personally, the manager decides to manage the situation privately (off the company books, but paying the man who brought the block with goods from the company's stores while hiding the missing items from the company records). He makes a plan to send 3 men he can trust (his assistant, his nephew, and the former sailor) there with the two northern Indian couples as their support to find the gold if it exists and to mine it during the winter season when getting there and back is easiest because of frozen river crossings and it being the "off season" when ships cannot come and go to the post to pick up pelts and unload supplies which means the men are not needed at the post. The problems with the excursion begin because of various reasons, but the two main ones are that the son of the chief who is a hothead and believes he is stronger and smarter than everyone else and that he is never honored appropriately and the assistant manager who is a bully and enjoys challenging, dominating, and laughing at people. Only one person makes it back to the company at the end of the season. Because the manager planned the excursion as a way of taking advantage of the opportunity for himself, he asks that there be no leak of information about what happened. But that just raises questions among all the other men at the post who knew those who went (on a trip they were told was for investigating the news of a copper mine possibility to keep everyone from rushing off to find gold themselves) wonder why all the secrecy and why only one person returned. The details of the story are interesting and actually fascinating. It's a short novel, only 288 pages. I gave it 4 1/2 stars out of 5.